SDCC '11

This Inn is out: San Diego Comic-Con housing closes until March 22

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Well this time it took about 5 hours. About the same as the passes. Since noon, people have been reserving hotels for this year's San Diego Comic-Con. While the process itself was painless -- a quick entry to a website where the diligent who had planned their hotel picks could easily choose up to 20 and get out -- the waiting game has begun. Or as Crazy4ComicCon aptly put it on Twitter: "nerd rage has given way to nerd angst."

SD11: No more room at the volunteer booth, either

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If you were thinking of getting into the 2011 San Diego Comic-Con via volunteering, that window too passed a few weeks ago:

San Diego Comic-Con Ticketween aftermath: Regrets, DNS problems, Slamdance

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In the aftermath of Saturday's Comic-Con sellout, folks were kicking their server tires, expressing apologies, and planning to put the comics back in Comic-Con.

San Diego Comic-Con tickets sold out in seven hours, leaving fans spent

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It didn't take that long for tickets to this year's San Diego Comic-Con to sell out after they went on sale yesterday -- but it did seem like an eternity for those who spent four+ hours hitting the F5 key in hopes of getting through. The ticket site -- run by indie ticketseller TicketLeap -- went live at 9 am PST and immediately slowed to an excruciating halt -- it never technically crashed. Those who persevered through fail screens eventually got tickets -- by about 6 pm EST, 3 pm PST, all tickets were gone. We've already reported some of the bitter reports on twitter, but this really does seem to have been a year of massive frustration. The TicketLeap site took more than 35,000,000 hits during the ticket buying process...allowing for 100,000 tickets sold (let's say), that's 350 refreshes per person, but who knows how many actually TRIED to get on. No wonder that Isotope responded with the "FailFrog:"

San Diego Comic-Con tickets leap to frustration; UPDATE: Four-day passes sold out

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UPDATE: Four day passes sold out about 4 pm e.s.t. Single day tickets are still available. For now.

To the surprise of no one, when passes for this year's CCI:SD went on sale this morning at 9 am P.S.T., even the industrial-grade servers at TicketLeap were immediately hobbled. Sales have been going on all afternoon, with this the most seen screen:

TicketLeap takes pride in handling Comic-Con ticket sales

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As you may recall, this Saturday is the FOURTH attempt at Pass-oween for the 2011 San Diego Comic-Con, with tickets going on sale with a new, multi-phase system which is being handled by TicketLeap, which explains in a press release:

San Diego Comic-Con badges go on sale February 5

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After two melted servers and a stressful stress test that saw 1000 tickets sold in 60 seconds despite maddening lag times, Comic-Con International: San Diego is giving it a go again, putting passes to...

Crime does not pay: 2 busted for selling bogus Comic-Con passes

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Two young men from LA have pled guilty to selling bogus Comic-Con passes. The two advertised their counterfeit passes on Craigslist and sold them to two women for $120 each. The purchasers were dismayed...

51,658 people tried to buy Comic-Con passes today

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TicketLeap, the company tasked with handling the onslaught of ticket requests for San Diego, has analysis of how it went. With numbers. What happens when 51,658 people try to buy 1,000 Comic-Con tickets all at...

Comic-Con International manages to sell 1000 tickets in 60 seconds. UPDATE: Next announcement in...

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Well, the test seems to have worked in that Comic-Con International was able to actually sell 1000 tickets. But it all happened so fast. People logging into the TicketLeap site were able, after some hanging, to get in and register for tickets. But according to Jonah Weiland, who joined with others to attempt to buy tickets, within moments, a “Checkout failed: Not enough tickets remain for the event to fulfill your purchase” result came up. So about 1000 tickets were sold in 60 seconds. Given the 250-requests-a-second that David Glanzer referred to yesterday, that's not hard to believe.

San Diego Pass-o-ween: David Glanzer on selling tickets

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While the annual internet meltdown for getting a hotel room at the Comic-Con International in San Diego is now an annual tradition, it still came as a surprise to many this year that just selling passes to the mega-entertainment/comics event got too big for a server to manage. On November 1, tickets went on sale for the first time, and the con's website couldn't handle the number of requests. On November 22, a second attempt with a new, professional event seller was made, but the demand melted their servers to slag, too. With the expeditioneers set up at base camp, and looking anxiously at the snows about to come, San Diego is about to make another attempt to scale Everest. The con is trying a test tomorrow at 8 am PST with a two tiered system – Logging onto the site of Ticketleap – a ticketing company Ticketmaster alternative specially set up to handle huge web demand – will get you registered. Once the horde of hits is managed, an email from Epic Registration – which was handling ticket sales in the last attempt -- will allow you to buy two tickets.

It’s a crazy solution for a crazy situation. We talked to David Glanzer, the CCI Director of Marketing & PR to find out what’s happening and how the con is growing this time.

Comic-Con schedules test to sell tickets again

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After two attempts at putting four-day passes on sale, Comic-Con International: San Diego is giving it another shot, this time with a Registration Test which will roll out tomorrow. They'll attempt to sell 1000 badges via TWO different companies, in a process so complicated we couldn't summarize if we tried:

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